– Another £14 million invested to expand land
available for exciting development
– Deal takes project to next stage, with commercial
partners now being sought
– Crucial space for The London Cancer Hub’s
innovative ‘Knowledge Centre’ secured
A new £14.1 million investment sets the stage for a site in
Sutton, south London, to become the world’s leading hub for
cancer research and treatment.
The London Borough of Sutton has purchased a further 2.23
hectares of NHS land on the site of one of the UK’s most
significant regeneration projects, The London Cancer Hub.
The London Cancer Hub aims to be a global centre for cancer
innovation, bringing together scientists, doctors, innovative
companies, patients and the local community.
It is a partnership between the London Borough of Sutton and The
Institute of Cancer Research, London, working with the support of
The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, The Mayor of London and
Epsom and St Helier University Hospitals NHS Trust.
The £14.1 million deal doubles the land previously purchased on
the site for cancer research and commercial enterprise –
following a £14 million investment to buy 2.22 hectares in
2017.
A pioneering ‘Knowledge Centre’ will be one of a series of
state-of-the-art academic and commercial buildings to be
developed on the newly acquired land.
The Knowledge Centre will be the heart of research, knowledge
sharing, commercial innovation, teaching and communication for
The London Cancer Hub – hosting laboratories, academic and
private-sector meeting facilities, public exhibition space and a
rooftop viewing gallery.
The centrepiece building will encourage the intermingling of
scientists, clinicians, commercial staff and the public –
stimulating new ideas that will help drive advances in cancer
research and translation for patient benefit.
The London Cancer Hub promises to be a world-leading life-science
campus anchored by new research buildings, restaurants and hotel
accommodation, and co-located with hospital facilities of The
Royal Marsden. It is set to create 13,000 jobs while contributing
more than £1 billion to the UK economy each year.
A further 1.6 hectares of land on the site was purchased in 2015
for a new secondary school. Building work is now
underway on the £40m Harris Academy Sutton, a
science-specialist school which is set to nurture the next
generation of young scientists. The school will be completed by
September 2019 and open in a temporary building from September
2018.
The London Cancer Hub project will shortly be seeking commercial
partners to begin developing buildings on the newly acquired
land.
The London Cancer Hub demonstrates the UK’s and London’s
ambitions to remain a world leader in life sciences after the
country leaves the European Union. Life-science clusters like The
London Cancer Hub will play an important role in the delivery of
the Government’s life sciences industrial strategy.
The project will accelerate progress in making the discoveries
that will defeat cancer – enabling The Institute of Cancer
Research (ICR) to discover more cancer drugs, and alongside its
hospital partner, The Royal Marsden, increase the chances that
they will be successfully developed for patients.
The Hub will be developed on the Sutton site of the ICR and The
Royal Marsden, and is ultimately intended to cover 280,000 square
metres.
Councillor , Leader of Sutton Council,
said:
“The London Cancer Hub is one of the most exciting projects to be
happening nationally, so I am very proud that it is happening
here in our borough. Our ambition is that this will become one of
the most important sites for cancer research, treatment and
diagnosis in the world.”
Professor Paul Workman, Chief Executive of The Institute
of Cancer Research, London, said:
“It’s exciting to reach such an important milestone in creating
The London Cancer Hub. Purchasing this new tranche of land now
unlocks the site for development, allowing ourselves and the
London Borough of Sutton to seek commercial partners with
expertise in constructing state-of-the-art life-science parks.
“The London Cancer Hub will be a magnet for the world’s top
cancer researchers, clinicians, pharmaceutical and biotech
companies, and other innovative enterprises working in a virtuous
circle.
“We are hugely grateful to our partners at the London Borough of
Sutton for making the capital investment to take this project
forward. Working with them and our hospital partner, The Royal
Marsden, and with the support of The Mayor of London, we are
going to bring about transformative change in cancer research and
treatment.”
Rajesh Agrawal, London’s Deputy Mayor for Business,
said:
“London is already a hotbed of scientific research and innovation
and schemes like this can only enhance the capital’s reputation
as a world-renowned centre for groundbreaking medical advances.”
Find out more about The London Cancer Hub
at londoncancerhub.org